Remove 2003 Remove Data Quality Remove Strategy
article thumbnail

Data and gen AI: Keys to Air Europa’s digital strategy

CIO Business Intelligence

To reach desired outcomes, the airline had to work on many fronts, such as the initial sponsorship of the decentralizing program, the definition of the strategy, the involvement of key areas, a tactical selection of technology, and creation of hybrid teams between business and IT.

Strategy 115
article thumbnail

Finding Data Quality

Jim Harris

Have you ever experienced that sinking feeling, where you sense if you don’t find data quality, then data quality will find you? In the spring of 2003, Pixar Animation Studios produced one of my all-time favorite Walt Disney Pictures— Finding Nemo. You, Data-Dude, takin’ on the defects. Data Cleansing.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Sport analytics leverage AI and ML to improve the game

CIO Business Intelligence

“The reason that understanding is so difficult to build in baseball is because there’s an entire industry of people selling nonsensical ideas about the data all the time,” James said at the time. The first thing is having a data strategy, having a foundation of data, and then asking questions of it.”

Analytics 118
article thumbnail

3 powerful lessons of using data governance frameworks

CIO Business Intelligence

The first published data governance framework was the work of Gwen Thomas, who founded the Data Governance Institute (DGI) and put her opus online in 2003. They already had a technical plan in place, and I helped them find the right size and structure of an accompanying data governance program.

article thumbnail

Decades of empowering efficient data decisions

IBM Big Data Hub

IBM’s contributions to developing digital data storing technology set the precedent for the standardized method of data storage for years to come. How has IBM helped businesses organize, store, and leverage their data from the 1920s until today? Bad data costs companies an average of $15 million. . ” .